Jack Schiff
Jack Schiff, born in 1909 and died April 30, 1999, spent the better part of three decades shaping some of DC Comics' most enduring titles. He is remembered primarily as the editor who oversaw the Batman family of comics from 1942 to 1964, a tenure that defined the character's tone through the postwar era and into the early Silver Age. Beyond Batman, Schiff contributed to a remarkably broad range of DC output, earning writing credits across more than 800 issues with a catalog that stretched from war anthologies like *Our Army at War* and *Star Spangled War Stories* to humor titles such as *Real Screen Comics* and *The Fox and the Crow*.
His creative fingerprints extend to character development as well — Schiff was a co-creator of Starman, Tommy Tomorrow, and the Wyoming Kid, each reflecting the genre diversity that characterized mid-century American comics. His editorial and writing work on *Adventure Comics* further underscores how central he was to DC's publishing identity during its formative decades.
Though Schiff's name rarely surfaces in mainstream discussions the way some artist collaborators do, his long career bridged the Golden and Silver Ages in ways that quietly shaped the superhero and genre-comics landscape. He remained active into his later years, leaving behind a catalog that rewards serious examination.
Full bibliography (first 500) · 67 series
Original biography and editorial content © comicbooks.com™. Information drawn in part from Wikipedia and the Grand Comics Database. Portrait by Hayden Schiff from Cincinnati, USA / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0).